Food
cannot be grown without water. In Africa, one in three people endure
water scarcity and climate change will make things worse. Building on
Africa’s highly sophisticated indigenous water management systems could
help resolve this growing crisis, but these very systems are being
destroyed by large-scale land grabs amidst claims that Africa's water is
abundant, under-utilised and ready to be harnessed for export-oriented
agriculture. GRAIN looks behind the current scramble for land in Africa
to reveal a global struggle for what is increasingly seen as a commodity
more precious than gold or oil - water.
The Alwero river in Ethiopia’s Gambela region provides both sustenance and identity for the indigenous Anuak people
who have fished its waters and farmed its banks and surrounding lands
for centuries. Some Anuak are pastoralists, but most are farmers who
move to drier areas in the rainy season before returning to the river
banks. This seasonal agricultural cycle helps nurture and maintain soil
fertility. It also helps structure the culture around the collective
repetition of traditional cultivation practices related to rainfall and
rising rivers as each community looks after its own territory and the
waters and farmlands within it.
One new plantation in Gambela, owned by Saudi-based billionaire
Mohammed al-Amoudi, is irrigated with water diverted from the Alwero
River. Thousands of people depend on Alwero's water for their survival
and Al-Moudi's industrial irrigation plans could undermine their access
to it. In April 2012, tensions over the project spilled over, when an
armed group ambushed Al-Amoudi's Saudi Star Development Company
operations, leaving five people dead.
The tensions in south western Ethiopia illustrate the central
importance of access to water in the global land rush. Hidden behind the
current scramble for land is a world-wide struggle for control over
water. Those who have been buying up vast stretches of farmland in
recent years, whether they are based in Addis Ababa,
Dubai or London, understand that the access to water they gain, often
included for free and without restriction, may well be worth more over
the long-term, than the land deals themselves.
In recent years, Saudi Arabian companies have been acquiring millions of hectares of lands
overseas to produce food to ship back home. Saudi Arabia does not lack
land for food production. What’s missing in the Kingdom is water, and
its companies are seeking it in countries like Ethiopia.
Indian companies like Bangalore-based Karuturi Global are doing the
same. Aquifers across the sub-continent have been depleted by decades of
unsustainable irrigation. The only way to feed India's growing
population, the claim is made, is by sourcing food production overseas,
where water is more available.
"The value is not in the land," says Neil Crowder of UK-based Chayton Capital which has been acquiring farmland in Zambia. "The real value is in water.” [1]
And companies like Chayton Capital think that Africa is the best place
to find that water. The message repeated at farmland investor
conferences around the globe is that water is abundant in Africa. It is
said that Africa’s water resources are vastly under utilised, and ready
to be harnessed for export oriented agriculture projects.
The reality is that a third of Africans already live in water-scarce
environments and climate change is likely to increase these numbers
significantly. Massive land deals could rob millions of people of their
access to water and risk the depletion of the continent's most precious
fresh water sources.
All of the land deals in Africa involve large-scale, industrial
agriculture operations that will consume massive amounts of water.
Nearly all of them are located in major river basins with access to
irrigation. They occupy fertile and fragile wetlands, or are located in
more arid areas that can draw water from major rivers. In some cases the
farms directly access ground water by pumping it up. These water
resources are lifelines for local farmers, pastoralists and other rural
communities. Many already lack sufficient access to water for their
livelihoods. If there is anything to be learnt from the past, it is that
such mega-irrigation schemes can not only put the livelihoods of
millions of rural communities at risk, they can threaten the freshwater
sources of entire regions. (See Water mining, the wrong type of farming and Death of the Aral Sea)
SOURCE: http://www.grain.org/article/entries/4516-squeezing-africa-dry-behind-every-land-grab-is-a-water-grab
SOURCE: http://www.grain.org/article/entries/4516-squeezing-africa-dry-behind-every-land-grab-is-a-water-grab
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